On Monday, President Trump phoned into the podcast of his former deputy F.B.I. director, Dan Bongino, and announced that he wanted to “nationalize” American elections in fifteen “crooked” states—he didn’t say which ones—ahead of the upcoming midterms, in which most people in Washington, D.C., these days, including, apparently, Trump himself, expect Republicans to suffer widespread losses. A federal takeover of elections was necessary, Trump said, because he was the real winner of the 2020 election and also because “these people”—he didn’t say which people, but one can guess—“were brought to our country to vote, and they vote illegally.”
When asked about the President’s idea, House Speaker Mike Johnson, the Louisiana Republican, who owes whatever tenuous hold he currently has on his job to Trump, didn’t say what any states’-rights-loving Southern Republican would have said in the past: Are you crazy? Instead, channelling the boss, he complained about blue-state election practices. “We had three House Republican candidates who were ahead on Election Day in the last election cycle, and every time a new tranche of ballots came in, they just magically whittled away until their leads were lost,” he said. “It looks on its face to be fraudulent.” Steve Bannon, the former Trump strategist turned public MAGA ideologue, was even less subtle. “We’re going to have ICE surround the polls come November,” he said on his “War Room” podcast. Addressing Democrats, he added, “We’re not going to sit here and allow you to steal the country again.”
Is it panicky, inflammatory, or just plain pointless to take statements such as these seriously? A decade ago, in the America of the Before Times, this would have been a ridiculous discussion, given that it is “not constitutional or legal” to federalize elections as Trump wants, as the Republican election lawyer Benjamin Ginsberg put it this week. But we live in the post-January 6th world, so the better question to ask is this: With a President who is already the first in our history to try to overturn the results of an election he decisively lost, what more will it take for us to finally acknowledge that, when he says this stuff, he actually means to follow through with it?
Back in 2020, Trump’s covering fire for his attack on the legitimacy of that election—and to be clear, that’s what he’s doing again now—began several months in advance of the election itself, with a series of nearly two hundred inflammatory statements claiming that it was going to be “rigged.” In disputing his subsequent defeat, Trump created his own self-fulfilling prophecy.
This time, the difference is not that Trump is complaining in advance about an election that he fears he’s going to lose; it’s that his threats to the integrity of the upcoming midterm elections have come earlier, louder, and with greater specificity and purpose than ever before. Time and again, starting almost from the moment he returned to the White House, in January last year, he has made it clear that he will not accept the outcome of almost any race in which a Democrat is the winner—even when they are runaway victors. (He recently accused Abigail Spanberger of cheating to win the Virginia governor’s race in November, although she beat her Republican opponent by nearly fifteen points.) On Wednesday, in an interview with NBC News, Trump gave what is now his standard answer: I will accept the results of the election only if I think that it is fair. The point seems to be that, for Trump, any election won by a Democrat is, by definition, unfair, fake, rigged. Given how often Trump has repeated this view, it seems reasonable to stipulate that, the more the polls show the President and his Republican Party bleeding support ahead of the midterms, the more he will preëmptively question the very possibility that the elections could produce an honest and reliable result.
If only this were just a matter of Trump talking. A list of actions that he’s already taken since returning to the White House includes issuing an executive order, later struck down by a federal court, to make sweeping changes to the electoral process, such as requiring proof of citizenship in order to vote; hiring election deniers into key positions across the federal government; ordering investigations into the nonexistent fraud that he claims robbed him of victory in 2020; and pressuring state and local officials to change election laws to get rid of mail-in balloting and redraw congressional-district boundaries in order to advantage Republican candidates. In one remarkable example, which recently became public, on the day that Alex Pretti was killed by federal agents in Minneapolis, the Attorney General, Pam Bondi, suggested in a letter to Minnesota’s governor, Tim Walz, that the thousands of heavily armed immigration officers currently terrorizing the city’s residents would only withdraw if, among other things, the state agreed to turn over its voter rolls to the Justice Department. What, exactly, does she want them for?
And then there is what’s happening in Georgia, where, this past week, F.B.I. agents accompanied by Tulsi Gabbard, Trump’s director of National Intelligence, raided the Fulton County election headquarters to seize evidence related to Trump’s 2020 defeat in the state. In the days since, the Administration has offered a shifting array of explanations for why an official whose job it is to oversee our nation’s response to international threats should be involved in a domestic political matter—the brightest of red lines in America since the scandalous revelations in the nineteen-seventies about the government spying on its own citizens. Trump said on Thursday that Bondi had asked Gabbard to be in Georgia, though just a day earlier he claimed that he did not know she had been there, while Gabbard herself wrote in a letter to Congress that “the president himself” had directed her to be present. None of which, of course, answers the question of what it is that the Administration is actually doing in investigating a crime which, let’s be clear here, did not occur.
The Georgia case, whatever it leads to, underscores the extent to which Trump remains obsessed with rewriting history to expunge his 2020 loss. “They rigged the second election. I had to win it. I needed it for my own ego,” he told the National Prayer Breakfast on Thursday. “I would’ve had a bad ego for the rest of my life.” The level of obsession indicated by these comments ought to be proof (as if any were needed) that he is not prepared to accept future losses, either.
In that sense, one of the most telling of the President’s recent comments was an aside he raised in an interview with the Times a few weeks back: Trump, looking ahead to this fall, told the reporters—on the record—that he had made a mistake in not ordering the National Guard to seize voting machines in swing states that he ended up losing in 2020. “Well, I should have,” he said.
The reason Trump did not go forward with seizing voting machines—or declaring martial law or whatever other crazy scheme Sidney Powell and Rudy Giuliani concocted to overturn his 2020 loss—was that his own White House counsel, Attorney General, Defense Secretary, Vice-President, and chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff objected. Six years ago, Trump had a roomful of advisers who would not have gone along with shattering one of the fundamental norms of American democracy. Does anyone think that is still the case today?
On Thursday, when the White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, was asked about Bannon’s idea to send ICE to polling places, she specifically refused to rule it out, and told reporters that, in fact, she “can’t guarantee” that armed federal militia would not be swarming around election sites this fall. We should take her at her word. The President has already told us in the most explicit possible terms that he intends to go after the 2026 elections. Plans are being made, even if we don’t exactly know what form Trump’s attempt to follow through on his rhetoric will take. Maybe it will be ICE, maybe it will be something else. The question at this point is not if—it’s how. ♦









